This changes the behaviour of output to browser to use the standard SilverStripe rendering process rather than an echo statement to enable easier testability.
This is now the default setting for both "sake" and "phpunit"
runs, because of performance reasons (every manifest flush takes
multiple seconds). On the other hand, we want to make errors
like missing classes more obvious to developers.
See discussion in https://github.com/silverstripe/sapphire/pull/620
While well-intentioned, this test keeps causing problems
due to wrong timezone settings in test mode.
It shouldn't completely abort test execution,
since its more of an environment sanity check than a failed test.
Refactored to mark test skipped (regardless of offset, as long as
its greater than 5 seconds). And skipping tests altogether
on SQLite3 with new supportsTimezoneOverride() check.
SapphireTest->setUp() sets the PHP timezone to UTC (see 59547745),
but SQLite doesn't support this for a DB connection.
Since changing it on a global UNIX system level is infeasible,
the tests need to be skipped.
Leave the decision to the phpunit.xml config (via <get> setting),
or to the individual run via "phpunit <folder> '' flush=1".
Flushing takes multiple seconds even on my fast SSD,
which greatly reduces the likelyhood of developers adopting TDD.
Necessary to have the <get name="db" /> directive
working in phpunit.xml definitions, which in turns allows
us to use GET parameters to switch the database connection
for running automated tests.
See initial idea at http://open.silverstripe.org/ticket/6441. Added $template property and corresponding getters / setters for customizing the template used. Added relevant unit test.
If the applyRelation() was passed a relation that went to a class with a parent
class with a database table, applyRelation would return the name of the parent
class, rather than the class the relation was actually too.
Without this bugfix, if you had a Page that used to be a SiteTree, and you tried to use Versiond::get_version() or Versioned::get_latest_version() to return the older SiteTree version, nothing would be returned, because the results were being filtered by ClassName. This caused bugs in the history panel for certain combinbations of page classname alteration.
If the applyRelation() was passed a relation that went to a class with a parent
class with a database table, applyRelation would return the name of the parent
class, rather than the class the relation was actually too.
This bug was caused by the fact that SQLQuery::whereAny() removed existing filters. In line with addWhere() and setWhere(), I split this into addWhereAny() and setWhereAny(). Strictly speaking, this drops the method SQLQuery::whereAny(), but it was really just an internal function for exclude, and so I think that's acceptable.
In some circumstances a custom generated list will already only contain
the items for the current page. The automatic limiting will then limit
the already limited list, breaking pagination. This allows you to disable
automatic limiting so all items are shown regardless of the current page.